logo
West Indies pacemen reduce Australia to 99-6 in third test, an overall lead of 181

West Indies pacemen reduce Australia to 99-6 in third test, an overall lead of 181

KINGSTON, Jamaica (AP) — Shamar Joseph and Alzarri Joseph bowled with pace and vintage West Indies intent in the night session Sunday as Australia struggled to 99 for six in its second innings, an overall lead of 181 in the third cricket test.
The pace bowlers dominated on Day 2 at Sabina Park, when 15 wickets fell across both teams.
Cameron Green was unbeaten on 42 and Australian skipper Pat Cummins was five not out at stumps after a torrid 40-minute stand that netted 30 runs.
Australia had a 2-0 lead going into the last test of the series after wins in Barbados and Grenada, and took an 82-run first-innings lead after bowling West Indies out for 143 by the dinner break on Sunday.
But that meant having to bat under lights again in a day-night match that seems destined to finish inside three days.
The Australians took nine wickets in two sessions after West Indies resumed at 16-1 on Sunday and lost their last seven wickets for 70 runs, chasing Australia's first innings of 225.
John Campbell led the West Indies' scoring with 36 and Shai Hope (23) was the only other Caribbean batter to reach the 20s as Australia's five-pronged pace attack kept the home team under constant pressure.
Scott Boland, selected at the expense of veteran spinner Nathan Lyon, removed both Campbell and Hope, completed a run-out of allrounder Justin Greaves and took the final wicket to finish with figures of 3-34.
Cummins and Josh Hazlewood took two wickets apiece and Mitchell Starc, playing his 100th test match, returned 1-32 from 13 overs.
The Australians lost quick wickets in the night conditions on Day 1 and it started badly for the tourists again in the second innings when 19-year-old opener Sam Konstas fell to Shamar Joseph (2-26) for the third time in the series, getting a thick outside edge to gully and departing for a duck in the second over. He has scored just 50 runs in six innings in the series.
Usman Khawaja (14) pulled Shamar Joseph for a boundary to take Australia's lead past 100 but dragged onto his stumps two balls later when the West Indies paceman angled a ball back in from around the wicket.
Steve Smith (5) edged Alzarri Joseph's third ball of the day between second and third slip for a boundary and then was rattled by a short, sharp bouncer in the same over.
Alzarri Joseph (3-19) was bowling at speeds up to 147 kph (91 mph), mixing bouncers with a good length and it was a slightly fuller ball that took out Smith's off stump as Australia slipped to 28-3.
Green continued with Travis Head (16), Beau Webster (13) and Alex Carey (0) until Australia slumped to 69-6 with the tailenders exposed.
Carey, who was hit on the helmet on the first delivery he faced, tried to advance down the pitch against Alzarri Joseph two balls later and only succeeded in edging to first slip.
Cummins hadn't scored before he brushed a ball behind off the gloves but was given not out. TV replays showed he would have been given out if the West Indies had reviewed the on-field decision.
Cummins narrowly avoided a run-out when he was sent back by Greene to the non-striker's end with the total on 80-6, but he survived to get his team to stumps.
___
AP cricket: https://apnews.com/hub/cricket
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Wrexham complete signing of George Thomason from Bolton
Wrexham complete signing of George Thomason from Bolton

New York Times

time2 hours ago

  • New York Times

Wrexham complete signing of George Thomason from Bolton

Wrexham's preparations for the Championship continue to gather pace with Bolton Wanderers captain George Thomason becoming their fourth summer signing. The 24-year-old midfielder has signed a three-year deal after the two clubs agreed a fee believed to be in the region of £1.2 million ($1.62m). He will join up with his new team-mates later this week after the squad today landed back in the UK after a fortnight away on tour in Australia and New Zealand. 'I'm buzzing to be here,' says Thomason, who faced Wrexham three times last season in the league and EFL Trophy. 'And I can't wait to be part of the journey the club has been on. It's going to be a really exciting season.' Another bold move, Welcome to Wrexham, George Thomason. 🔴⚪ #WxmAFC — Wrexham AFC (@Wrexham_AFC) July 21, 2025 He joins Ryan Hardie, Danny Ward and record signing Liberato Cacace as the new faces in Phil Parkinson's squad. Further additions are planned with Josh Windass also wanted following his recent departure from Sheffield Wednesday after his contract was cancelled by mutual consent. Thomason gained a reputation as an energetic box-to-box midfielder at Bolton, suggesting he could slot in on the left side of Wrexham's trio of central midfielders if Parkinson sticks with a 3-5-1-1 set-up. Alternatively, should the manager persist with the experiment of playing two attacking midfielders behind a lone striker — as seen for an hour in the final tour defeat to Wellington Phoenix last Saturday — then Thomason could fill one of those roles. He's also renowned for a competitive edge, having picked up 11 yellow cards in League One last season — the joint-tenth highest tally in the division, alongside Wrexham captain James McClean. Thomason, who was also on League one side Huddersfield Town's radar this summer, becomes only the third seven-figure signing in Wrexham's history, behind record buy Liberato Cacace (an initial £2.17m) and Sam Smith (£2m). ()

England target series win over India and World Cup momentum
England target series win over India and World Cup momentum

Yahoo

time5 hours ago

  • Yahoo

England target series win over India and World Cup momentum

Off-spinner Charlie Dean is hoping a one-day international series victory over India would take England into the World Cup on a high. Dean and her team-mates head into Tuesday's third match at Chester-le-Street having avenged their four-wicket defeat at Southampton with an eight-wicket victory in a rain-affected clash at Lord's on Saturday to set up a decider in the north-east. A win would make amends for the 3-2 T20 series defeat by the Indians which preceded the 50-over encounters and provide a boost as Charlotte Edwards and her players work towards this Autumn's World Cup campaign in India and Sri Lanka. Dean said: 'It is massively important. We are taking every game as it comes, but ultimately we want to win the series. It will put us with great momentum into the World Cup. 'We've still got a lot of time and a lot of cricket before then, but hopefully it will only help us.' England chased down a revised total of 115 from 24 overs at headquarters to gain a foothold in the series, but they were also able to take positives from their defeat in the opening game when after being reduced to 97 for four, Sophia Dunkley's 83 and a half-century from Alice Davidson-Richards helped them post 258 for six. Dean said: 'While we don't want to be in those situations, it's brilliant that we can learn from that and really grow and put those platforms together where previously we might have crumbled. 'We always want to be on top but realistically, we are not going to win games by 120 runs now, they're going to be closer, so the more that we can spend time in pressure situations and be on the right side of them, the better.' Edwards replaced Jon Lewis as head coach in April and has had little time to hone her squad – from which Alice Capsey has been released to play for Surrey – for what lies ahead, but Dean has been impressed by her consistency in reflecting upon results good and bad. She said: 'That's what really good head coaches do, they stay consistent and I think that will hopefully allow us to really hone in on the learnings that we're having. 'I guess when you've got a World Cup coming up, it doesn't matter too much about the results beforehand as long as you take those learnings and you improve and do that quickly. 'That's maybe where frustrations are if we are making the same mistakes, but hopefully that won't continue to happen as much as we grow and get better. 'I love working with Lottie and she's got a brilliant tactical mind around the game, so I can definitely see us going from strength to strength.'

Win in India decider would be 'shift' for England
Win in India decider would be 'shift' for England

Yahoo

time5 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Win in India decider would be 'shift' for England

Winning Tuesday's one-day series decider against India would help "shift" the narrative around the England women's team, says all-rounder Charlie Dean. England levelled the three-match series with victory in a rain-shortened match at Lord's on Saturday, leaving the contest tied at 1-1 going into the final match at Chester-le-Street on Tuesday. Following their Ashes hammering by Australia in the winter, England won all six matches against West Indies at the start of the summer but were well beaten by India in the T20 series which followed. "Losing the T20 series and the first game of the 50-over, it would feel like a bit of a shift," Dean said. "To be able to pull that off would be something really special and would give a lot of girls a lot of confidence going to India." Tuesday is England's last official fixture in the 50-over format before their World Cup campaign begins on 3 October against South Africa in India. A regular criticism of England of recent years has been their ability to win bilateral series outside of World Cups, only to lose pressure matches at the major tournaments. They lost to South Africa in the semi-finals of the 2023 T20 World Cup and exited last year's event at the group stage after crumbling in a winner-takes-all match against West Indies. Tuesday's decider will be as close as possible to such moments outside of the global events. "We have seen bilateral series where done really but when come to the World Cup games or tournament cricket we have not had the momentum or been clinical in those pressure moments," Dean said. "Any chance we can emulate that in bilateral series is perfect practice. "Obviously we want to win, but even if we don't we can take those learnings, keep getting better and set ourselves up to have a good 50-over competition. That is the most important. "No matter how the game goes tomorrow that we really reflect and learn from the situation." India women in England 2025

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store